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Pasquinades can take a
number of
literary forms,
including song, epigram, and satire.
Compared with
other kinds of satire, the
pasquinade tends...
-
government by the
writing of
satirical poems in
broad Roman dialect—called "
pasquinades", from the
Italian pasquinate—and
attaching them to the Pasquino. Thus...
- Lady of
Escalot One
Thousand and One
Nights The Book of Dede
Korkut The
pasquinades (satirical poems)
glued to the
Talking Statues of Rome. They
still appear...
-
performed during the
carnival of
Venice and
other such
festivals as well as
pasquinades. Both cities'
avvisi became more
diversified over time,
eventually anti****ting...
- (Romanesco:
Madama Lugrezzia) is one of the six "talking statues" of Rome.
Pasquinades —
irreverent satires poking fun at
public figures — were
posted beside...
-
other locations in Rome, the
statue was
returned to the
street in 1957.
Pasquinades –
irreverent satirical inscriptions poking fun at
public figures – were...
- hand-written
invectives on the
stone blocks used to make the obelisk.
These pasquinades read, "We do not want
Obelisks and Fountains, it is
bread that we want...
- in the
Letters of
Junius or Voltaire's Candide, or
scurrilous as in
pasquinades. In the
tradition of
anonymous British political criticism, The Federalist...
-
Concerning this, an
anonymous contemporary Roman satirist quipped in a
pasquinade (a
publicly posted poem) that quod non
fecerunt barbari fecerunt Barberini...
- the
talking statues of Rome. Like the
other five "talking statues",
pasquinades –
irreverent satires poking fun at
public figures – were
posted beside...